Legal Research Software System
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A Legal Research Software System is a research software system that supports legal research tasks.
- Context:
- It can range from being an Custom Legal Research System to being a 3rd-Party Legal Research System.
- It can be a Legal Information Search System that facilitates legal source searching to find answers to legal questions or gather legal knowledge.
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- Example(s):
- Counter-Example(s):
- See: Case Law Database, Legal Database, Legislative Tracking System, Legal Contract.
References
2023
- (GM-RKB ChatGPT, 2023) ⇒ Summarize the concept Legal Research System in 1- 2 paragraphs, promt.GM-RKB ChatGPT (model: gpt-4-1106-preview) Retrieved: 2023-12-24.
- QUOTE: A Legal Research System is a structured approach used by legal professionals to find and interpret sources of law to solve legal issues or understand the legal framework affecting a particular scenario. This system involves various steps, such as identifying the legal problem, choosing relevant jurisdictions, finding primary sources of law (statutes, case law, constitutions, and regulations), and secondary sources (law reviews, legal encyclopedias, treatises), as well as leveraging legal databases and technologies.
Legal research systems have evolved with digital advancements, enabling faster and more accurate research through online databases like Westlaw, LexisNexis, and Bloomberg Law. These databases offer powerful search tools to sift through vast amounts of legal texts to pinpoint pertinent case law, statutes, and legal principles. Effective legal research is foundational to legal practice, ensuring that attorneys and legal practitioners provide informed counsel, strategize cases appropriately, and remain compliant with the current state of the law.
- QUOTE: A Legal Research System is a structured approach used by legal professionals to find and interpret sources of law to solve legal issues or understand the legal framework affecting a particular scenario. This system involves various steps, such as identifying the legal problem, choosing relevant jurisdictions, finding primary sources of law (statutes, case law, constitutions, and regulations), and secondary sources (law reviews, legal encyclopedias, treatises), as well as leveraging legal databases and technologies.